Behavior of Friedmann-Robertson-Walker cosmological models in scalar- tensor gravity (Q1898379): Difference between revisions
From MaRDI portal
Created a new Item |
Added link to MaRDI item. |
||
links / mardi / name | links / mardi / name | ||
Revision as of 13:46, 1 February 2024
scientific article
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | Behavior of Friedmann-Robertson-Walker cosmological models in scalar- tensor gravity |
scientific article |
Statements
Behavior of Friedmann-Robertson-Walker cosmological models in scalar- tensor gravity (English)
0 references
29 January 1996
0 references
We analyze solutions to Friedmann-Robertson-Walker cosmologies in Brans- Dicke theory, where a scalar field is coupled to gravity. Matter is modelled by a \(\gamma\)-law perfect fluid, including false-vacuum energy as a special case. Through a change of variables, we reduce the field equations from fourth order to second order, and they become equivalent to a two-dimensional dynamical system. We then analyze the entire solution space of this dynamical system and find that many qualitative features of these cosmologies can be gleaned, including standard non- inflationary or extended inflationary expansion, but also including bifurcations of stable or unstable expansion or contraction, noninflationary vacuum-energy dominated models, and several varieties of ``coasting'', ``bouncing'', ``hesitating'', and ``vacillating'' universes. It is shown that the inflationary dogma, which states that a universe with curvature and dominated by inflationary matter will always approach a corresponding flat-space solution at late times, does not hold in general for the scalar-tensor theory, but rather that the occurrence if inflation depends upon the initial energy of the scalar field relative to the expansion rate. In the case of flat space \((k = 0)\), the dynamical system formalism generates some previously known exact power-law solutions.
0 references
Robertson-Walker-Friedmann universe
0 references
Brans-Dicke theory
0 references
expansion
0 references
contraction
0 references
dynamical system formalism
0 references